Похожие презентации:
Law in Kazakhstan
1. Law in Kazakhstan
Civil Law. General Part2. Introduction
3. Sources:
• Constitution• Civil Code
• Numerous laws (Law on JSC, Law on LLP
and PAL, Law on consumer rights
protection etc.)
• Others.
4. General Part
• Fundamental Principles of Civil Legislation• Protection of Civil Rights
• Subjects of Civil Law
• Property right
• Objects of Civil Law
• Transactions
• Representation and Power of Attorney
• Law of Obligations.
5. Principles:
• Equality of the participants• Inviolability of property
• Freedom of agreement
• Restitution for violated rights and their defense in the court
• Unrestricted circulation of goods, services and monetary
resources in the entire territory of the RK.
– Note: Restrictions are allowed only in accordance with the legislative acts, where
it is necessary for ensuring security, protection of life and health of the people,
protection of the natural environment and cultural valuables.
6. Protection of civil rights:
– restitution of status quo– compensation of material damage (real
damage + lost profit) and moral damage.
7. Subjects of civil relations:
Natural persons
Legal entities
Administrative-territorial units
State.
8. Natural persons
9. Natural persons:
• Citizens of Kazakhstan• Foreign citizens
• Stateless persons.
10. Legal capacity
is one’s capacity to have civil rightsand obligations [art.13 CC]
11. Legal capacity
• All citizens have equal LC [art.13(1) CC]• LC begins from one’s birth and ends with
one’s death. [art.13(2) CC]
• Content of LC: to owe any property,
inherit, choose place of residence, to have
intellectual property etc. [art.14 CC]
12. Active capacity (deed capacity, dispositive legal capacity)
citizen’s capacity by his own actionsto obtain and to exercise his civil
rights, to create for himself civil
obligations and to fulfill them [art.17
CC]
13. Active capacity
• Full AC begins with attaining one’smajority, 18 years. [art.17(1) CC]
• Marriage at 16 years old or emancipation
– full AC at 16. [art.17(2) CC]
14. Full AC age reduction:
• Marriage at the age of 16-18. Organ of stateregistration (ZAGS) gives permission. Minor receives full AC from
the moment of registration of marriage.
• Emancipation at the age of 16-18. Organ of
Guardianship and Tutorship makes decision. Minor receives full AC
from the moment when the decision was made.
15. Active capacity of minors…
… of 14 – 18 years old [art.22 CC]– All bargains – with the consent of parents,
adopters or tutors
– Dispose own income and objects of their
intellectual property, make day-to-day
bargains
16. Active capacity of minors…
…under 14 [art. 23 CC]– For them all the bargains are made by
parents, adopters and guardians
– Simple day-to-day bargains correspondent to
their age
17. Limitation of active capacity
Why:alcoholic or drug addiction which puts
one’s family in difficult financial situation
[art.27 CC]
18. Ceasing of active capacity
Why:mental decease due to which a person
does not realize own actions [art. 26 CC]
19. Legal entities
20. Legal entity:
It is an organization which:• has its separate property on the basis of property
right, right of business authority or right of
operational management;
• is liable for its obligations with this property;
• can in its own name acquire and exercise property
and personal non-property rights and obligations;
• can be a plaintiff and a defendant in the court;
• has independent balance-sheet or budget.
• A legal entity has a seal with its name. (art. 33 CC)
21.
Legal entityState LE
Private LE
Commercial
(Profit)
NonCommercial
(Non-profit)
22. Commercial organization
• Aimed on the receiving of profit• The income is distributed between the
participants
• Types of commercial organizations:
– state enterprise
– business partnership
– joint stock company
– production cooperative society (art. 34 (1,2) CC)
23. Non-commercial organization
• Does not have the receiving of profit as the mainaim
• The income is not distributed between the
participants
• Types of non-commercial organizations:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Institution
Public foundation
Non-commercial joint-stock company
Religious association
Consumer cooperative society
Social fund
Other types (art. 34 (1,3) CC)
24. Legal capacity of legal entity
• Begins from the moment of its creation(registration) or from the moment of the
obtaining of a license, if the license is
required for that activity.
• Finishes at the moment of the end of its
liquidation or at the moment of expiry of
the license, if the license was required for
that activity (art. 35 (1,2) CC )
25. Business partnership:
• It is a commercial organization, the charterfund of which is divided into shares of the
founders.
• The property of the business partnership,
created on the basis of investments of the
founders as well as the property that was
produced or acquired by the business
partnership during the period of its activity
belongs to that business partnership on the
basis of property right (art. 58 (1) CC)
26. Types of business partnerships
• general partnershipits participants (general partners), in the case of insufficiency of the
property of the partnership, bare the joint liability for the obligations of
the partnership with all their property (art. 63 CC)
• kommandit partnership
besides one or more general partners there are also one or more
participants with limited liability; only general partners can manage
the business activity of the partnership (art.72 CC)
• limited liability partnership
its partners bear the risk of losses associated with the activities of the
partnership within the limits of the contributions made by themselves
(art.77 CC)
• partnership with additional liability
its participants are liable for the obligations of the partnership with
their investments to the charter fund and in the case those are
insufficient – additionally with the property that belongs to them in the
amount proportionate to the contributions made by them (art.84 CC)
27. Joint stock company
• It is a legal entity, which makes theemission of shares with the scope to
attract the money for executing of its
activity (art.3 (1) of the Law of RK on JSC)
• its participants (shareholders) bear the risk
of losses associated with the activities of
company within the limits of the shares
that belong to them.
28. Property right
29. Property right
• The right to possess• The right to use
• The right to dispose (art.188 CC)
30.
Property rightRight to possess
Right to use
Right to dispose
31. Right of business authority
• It is a material right of a state enterprise,which has received the property from
the state and which exercises the right to
possess, to use and to dispose towards
that property, as it is provided for by the
legislation of the Republic of Kazakhstan.
(art.196 CC)
32. Right of business authority
Does not include the right to:sell or transmit the property to the other people
exchange
give in a long-term lease (over 3 years)
give on the non-paid basis the right to use the
property to the other people
• create branches of the state enterprise
• establish joint productions and joint companies
together with private entrepreneurs, invest therein
their production and monetary capital
• give credits to the private entrepreneurs with the
interest lower than the one constituted by the
National bank of the RK. (art.200 CC)
33. The right of operational management:
• It is a material right of an institution,state institution, financed by the owner, or
of a budget enterprise, which has
received the property from the owner
and which exercises the right to use, to
possess and to dispose of the property in
accordance with the legislation of the
Republic of Kazakhstan, with the aims of
its activity, with the tasks of the owner
and with the destination of this property.
(art.202 CC)
34. The right of operational management
• Does not include the right todetermine the legal destiny of the
property which the company had
received on the basis of the balancesheet. (art. 206 CC)
35. Grounds for acquisition of property right
• Primary Grounds• Derivative Grounds
36. Primary Grounds
• Manufacture or creation of things;• Fruits, products, and revenues received as a result
of the use of property.
• Find, treasure
• Acquisitive prescription – a person or legal entity,
who is not the owner of property but in good faith,
openly, and uninterruptedly possesses immovable
property as his own for fifteen years or other
property for five years acquires the right of
ownership in such property.
37. Derivative Grounds
• Contract of purchase/sale, barter, gift, orother transaction concerning the alienation
of this property.
• Inheritance
• Reorganization of a juridical person the
right of ownership in the property belonging
to it passes to the juridical persons-legal
successors of the reorganized juridical
person.
38. Grounds for termination of property right
Alienation by the owner of his property
to other persons;
Renunciation of the property right by
the owner;
Perishing or destruction of the property;
Loss of the property right to property in
other instances provided for by
legislation.
39. Compulsory deprival of property right
– Satisfaction of claims of creditor– Compulsory alienation of property which by
virtue of legislative acts can not belong to
the particular person
– Requisition (in cases of emergency)
– Confiscation
(by
court decision
as
punishment)
– Withdrawal of a land plot;
– Purchase of improvidently maintained
cultural and historical values.